Consider a Monolithic Dome Special Events Facility

These renderings represent a proposed Monolithic Dome Arena designed for various sporting events, entertainment venues, concerts and shows. As you can see, a Monolithic Dome is extremely flexible. It can be designed for any combination of large or small events and/or large or small spectator seating.

A Monolithic Dome facility can host a myriad of events, including but not limited to:

Professional Basketball

Professional Hockey

Wrestling Tournaments

High School Basketball & Volleyball

College Basketball & Volleyball

Entry-level Sports

Graduation Ceremonies

Concerts

Big Boy Toy Shows and other recreation-related shows

Ice Shows

Family Entertainment

Design Features and Options

Seating can range from 7,000 to 10,000 plus – including general admission, suite and club seating. Food warming areas, catered food services, Audio and Visual equipment are available for suite and club seating. Suite levels can include a media room with a clear view of the arena floor.

The team rooms feature coaches’ offices, official locker rooms, meeting rooms, restrooms, showers and equipment storage rooms, all located at the arena floor level.

The mezzanine level on all sides of the Monolithic Dome structure includes concessions and vendor areas. The home team side provides office space for Arena Management offices, conference rooms, private restrooms and a private outside entrance.

Mezzanine level hockey arena design — The mezzanine level of a hockey arena design. You can see where the lobby, concessions, restaurant club and main access to the mezzanine level are located. Seating for 7500 plus is included in this setup. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Hockey arena design — Indoor hockey arena with accommodating seating around three sides and a club/restaurant at one end. Suites and club seating included on the upper level. Locker rooms and offices located on the arena level. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Basketball arena setup — The club level and basketball arena set up. This free span design allows for a full-size basketball court with maximum seating at approximately 9700 seats. Bench areas are provided for teams and coaches. The press and media seats are located behind the teams. Team rooms are at the arena floor level. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Trade show setup — Setup for a trade show within the arena. This dome offers 23,866 square feet of available space for the exhibit floor. Images of semi-trucks inside the dome demonstrate the size capacity of the dome. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Concert setup — The arena works extremely well as a venue for concerts. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Durability and Longevity — A Monolithic Dome can survive most natural and man-made disasters and has the ability to last for centuries. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Flexibility — The dome’s rounded exterior and open, uninterrupted interior can be designed to serve many purposes. (LPDJ Architects LLC)

Anthony (Tony) Clarke is one busy Aussie. He runs a migration office that helps immigrants to his country with their necessary, complex paperwork, is involved with industrial hemp, markets music videos and DVDs and serves his community as Justice of the Peace and a Knight of the Order of St. John Hospitalier. Nevertheless in April 2001, he found the time to travel to Italy, Texas and take one of Monolithic’s dome-building Workshops.

Monolithic Constructors, Inc. is happy to offer great deals on our current inventory of Monolithic Cabins*! We have several ready to ship to your site. When these are gone, we will still be offering custom constructed cabins at regular prices.

Being the coinventor of the dome and the founder of the Monolithic Dome Institute has given David B. South the opportunity to not only fine tune the building process, but to create a company whose main mission is to make available Monolithic Dome technology to all the world. It is the hope of Monolithic to educate the public about Monolithic Domes and to provide professional services to its customers by creating a successful partnership with them through all phases of their dome design, planning and construction.

What’s a fertilizer blend plant’s number-one enemy? Moisture! If water gets into or condensation forms inside a storage unit, it quite quickly begins degrading the fertilizer and forming rust. But Monolithic uses a technology that keeps that troublesome process to a minimum.

Storing fertilizer has long given the dry bulk storage industry headaches. Among its problems is corrosion, ruining equipment and costing money. The Monolithic Dome is a structure solving this problem for the industry.